Top Items:
Newsdesk / Clout St:
Burris open to ethics probes, will cooperate with perjury review — U.S. Sen. Roland Burris said today he is open to a Senate ethics investigation into how he got the Senate seat from ex-Gov. Rod Blagojevich and that he has reached out to a Sangamon County prosecutor who is reviewing Burris' sworn testimony before Illinois lawmakers.
Discussion:
Washington Wire, The Hill's Blog Briefing Room, The Gun Toting Liberal, Patterico's Pontifications, Chicago Sun Times, The Capitol Fax Blog, The Swamp, PoliticalBase.com Blog, PoliGazette, CBS News, MyDD, The Politico, Hot Air, The Raw Story, Sunlight Foundation, Commentary, DISSENTING JUSTICE, Think Progress, Moe Lane, The Aristocrats and Washington Monthly
RELATED:
Associated Press:
Burris tried to raise funds for Blagojevich — Featured Topics: - Barack Obama - Presidential Transition — SPRINGFIELD, Ill. - U.S. Sen. Roland Burris now acknowledges attempting to raise money for ousted Gov. Rod Blagojevich — an explosive twist in his ever-changing story on how he landed …
Newsdesk / Vox Pop:
Roland Burris, resign — The benefit of the doubt had already been stretched thin and taut by the time Roland Burris offered his third version of the events leading to his appointment to the U.S. Senate. It finally snapped like a rubber band, popping him on that long Pinocchio nose of his, when he came out with version four.
Michelle Malkin:
“Yes, we care!” Porkulus protesters holler back — Hundreds of taxpayers took time out of their busy day to protest President Obama's “stimulus” bill-signing in Denver today. Jim Pfaff of Colorado Americans for Prosperity, Jon Caldara and the Independence Institute, former Rep. Tom Tancredo …
RELATED:
Michelle Malkin:
President Obama's 2,000-point tumble — On Nov. 4, after Barack Obama clinched the White House, the market closed at 9,625.28. — In mid-morning trading today, the day President Obama signs his massive Generational Theft Act into law and a day before he unveils a massive new mortgage entitlement, the Dow dropped to to 7,606.53.
Discussion:
www.dcexaminer.com, Wizbang, PoliBlog, Washington Monthly, Associated Press, Balloon Juice, Liberal Values and GayPatriot
Washington Post:
Late Change in Course Hobbled Rollout of Geithner's Bank Plan — Just days before Treasury Secretary Timothy F. Geithner was scheduled to lay out his much-anticipated plan to deal with the toxic assets imperiling the financial system, he and his team made a sudden about-face.
RELATED:
Wall Street Journal:
GM to End Brands, Cut 47,000 More Jobs — Saturn, Hummer Could Be History by 2011 as GM Plans to Slash Dealers; Chrysler Mentions Bankruptcy Option for First Time — General Motors Corp. and Chrysler LLC on Tuesday told the federal government they need at least $21.6 billion more combined …
Myglesias / Matthew Yglesias:
Politico's David Rogers Catches Republicans Lying About High-Speed Rail, Won't Call Them Liars — David Rogers has a piece in Politico that offers a nice summary of the recovery plan's actual high-speed rail provisions and the direct role of the White House in securing them:
RELATED:
David Rogers / The Politico:
Obama plots huge railroad expansion
Obama plots huge railroad expansion
Discussion:
The Politico, The Huffington Post, Reuters, Corrente, California High Speed …, Associated Press and Wall Street Journal
Helene Cooper / New York Times:
Obama to Send 17,000 More Troops to Afghanistan — WASHINGTON — President Obama will send an additional 17,000 American troops to Afghanistan this spring and summer in the first major military move of his presidency, White House officials said on Tuesday. — The increase would come on top …
RELATED:
Steve Benen / Washington Monthly:
CONGRESS GETS APPROVAL BOOST.... Republicans have spent quite a bit of time lately criticizing Congress. By now, the arguments are probably familiar: the Democratic leadership hasn't been “bipartisan” enough. They completed a stimulus package behind closed doors.
Discussion:
The Plum Line
RELATED:
Kenneth P. Vogel / The Politico:
Accused fraudster gave big to Dems — The Texas financier accused by the Securities and Exchange Commission Tuesday of “massive ongoing fraud” was a generous political donor who gave more heavily to Democrats. — Since 2000, R. Allen Stanford, the chief of the Stanford Financial Group in Houston …
RELATED:
CNN:
Bristol Palin: Abstinence for teens ‘not realistic’ — (CNN) — In her first interview since giving birth, the teenage daughter of Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin said having a child is not “glamorous,” and that telling young people to be abstinent is “not realistic at all.” — “It's just, like, I'm not living for myself anymore.
RELATED:
Wall Street Journal:
McCain's Vote Should Trouble Obama — By the president's own standard of bipartisanship, he has failed. — “John McCain Was Right.” — That's one headline we ought to see when President Barack Obama puts his name to the stimulus bill in Denver later today. But we won't.
Roxana Tiron / The Hill:
Air Force chief to ask Gates for more F-22s — The Air Force chief of staff is going to make his case with Defense Secretary Robert Gates in the coming weeks for more F-22 Raptor jets. — Gen. Norton Schwartz said that the Air Force is looking to buy more than the 183 radar-evading F-22s now ordered …
Discussion:
The Swamp
RELATED:
BBC:
A new jihad? — Turkey witnesses some of the most passionate demonstrations in support of Gaza — At a weekend meeting in Istanbul, 200 religious scholars and clerics met with senior Hamas officials to plot a new jihad centred on Gaza. — The BBC's Bill Law was the only Western journalist at the meeting.
Alexandra Gutierrez / American Prospect:
THIS BIKE IS NOT A PIPE BOMB. — Jeffrey Goldberg wasn't trying hard enough. Despite stuffing Hezbollah flags into his carry-ons and waving fake boarding passes under the noses of security employees, Goldberg was unable to get TSA sufficiently riled up. — His efforts were wasted.
US News:
Exclusive: Pat Robertson Says Obama ‘Showing Partisanship,’ Denounces Rush Limbaugh's ‘I Hope He Fails’ Remark — Interviewing Christian Broadcasting Network founder Pat Robertson recently for a forthcoming piece on the possibility of a Fairness Doctrine revival, I threw in a couple questions about President Obama.
Anne Bayefsky / The Corner:
A Foreign Policy of Obsequiousness — Yesterday in Geneva, President Obama unveiled the new look of America's foreign policy — obsequiousness. It was Day One for his emissaries to the U.N. planning committee of the Durban II conference. This is the racist “anti-racism” bash to be held in Geneva in April.
Chris Matthews / The Daily Beast:
Stop the Democratic Suicide — Blogs and Stories — If the Obama administration doesn't start to deal with the populist wave headed for Washington, Republicans will tap a reservoir of resentment that could destroy his presidency. — First they came for the bankers. Then they came for the CEOs.
Ben Smith / Ben Smith's Blogs:
Politicking, by David Axelrod — The indispensable Hyde Park Herald just put large portions of its archive online, offering access to some rather wonky Obama columns from the 1990s and early 2000s, and — better reading — to David Axelrod's reporting and columns from his days as a young reporter.
Newsdesk / Vox Pop:
Democrats' best choice in the 5th: Mike Quigley — The Tribune editorial board endorses Cook County Commissioner Mike Quigley in the Democratic primary for the 5th Congressional District. — The race to replace White House Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel in Congress has drawn nearly two dozen contenders …
Fernanda Santos / New York Times:
Resisting Home Evictions Becomes a Group Effort — As resistance to foreclosure evictions grows among homeowners, community leaders and some law enforcement officials, a broad civil disobedience campaign is starting in New York and other cities to support families who refuse orders to vacate their homes.
Discussion:
QandO
Edward L. Glaeser / Economix:
If You Got Money, It's Time to Spend Some — Edward L. Glaeser is an economics professor at Harvard. — In the last eight years, Americans have spent an extraordinary amount of money and borrowed a lot to make that spending possible. Total outstanding consumer credit was $1.7 trillion in 2000; the current figure is $2.6 trillion.
Wall Street Journal:
Geert Wilders Is a Test for Western Civilization — If Rushdie should be defended, why not the Dutch pol? — Twenty years ago, Andres Serrano put a plastic crucifix in a glass of urine, photographed it and called it art. Conservatives in particular weren't pleased: not with Mr. Serrano …
Jeff Bercovici / Portfolio:
Barbara Walters: Only the Morning Shows Will Last — “When I die and my obituary is written, it's going to say ‘She asked people what kind of a tree they wanted to be.’” — That's Barbara Walters, discussing “The Art of the Interview” this morning with 60 Minutes's Steve Kroft …
Howard Dean / The Huffington Post:
The Far Right's All Out Offensive Against Medical Research — Opponents of fixing our broken health care system are at it again, attempting to use their same old scare tactics and falsehoods to kill a common-sense health care provision is the economic recovery package.
Discussion:
The Hill's Blog Briefing Room
CNN:
Ex-Border Patrol agents get early prison release — (CNN) — Two former U.S. Border Patrol agents — whose cases became flashpoints in the controversy over border security — were released early from prison Tuesday, one of their attorneys and a congressman said.
Discussion:
RIGHTWINGSPARKLE
Gil Hoffman / Jerusalem Post:
Significant progress in UTJ, Likud talks — The United Torah Judaism Knesset faction will convene on Wednesday to decide whether to recommend to President Shimon Peres that Likud chairman Binyamin Netanyahu form a coalition, after UTJ officials reported significant progress in a meeting with a Likud lawyer on Tuesday morning.
Tara Parker-Pope / New York Times:
Vitamin Pills: A False Hope? — Ever since the Nobel Prize-winning biochemist Linus Pauling first promoted “megadoses” of essential nutrients 40 years ago, Americans have been devoted to their vitamins. Today about half of all adults use some form of dietary supplement, at a cost of $23 billion a year.
Newt Gingrich / Human Events:
The Plan — Democrats in Congress have made a $1.14 trillion bet on big government. — With less than 48 hours notice, they passed a 1,073 - page collection of special interest spending and dared to call it a “plan.” — With interest, the $787 billion bill will cost us, our children and their children about $1.14 trillion.